Answer : The correct option is, sour taste
Explanation :
Acid : It is a substance that has ability of donating proton or hydrogen ion or hydronium ion, .
The properties of an acid are :
Base : It is a substance that has ability of donating hydroxide ion, .
The properties of an base are :
As per question, the pH is 5 that means the solution is acidic in nature and follow the properties of an acid. So, the pH = 5 has the sour taste characteristic. While the other options are the properties of a base.
Hence, the correct option is, sour taste
Answer:
A. Solid
Explanation:
that is what creates a solid state. the particles are moving slowly enough (the matter is cold enough) that stable structures between them can be established. so, they get close together and create e.g. grids.
Binary fission: Asexual reproduction by division of nuclear materials in prokaryotes.
I hope that's help:0
Potential energy is converted into kinetic energy.
The part I cannot figure out is the question afterwards which is If the calorimeter has a heat capacity of 8.20 J/°C and a correction is included to account for the heat absorbed by the calorimeter what is the heat of reaction q
Answer:
a. qrxn = 831 J
b. 863 J
Explanation:
we know that density is the mass of a substance per unit volume
d=mass/volume
the volume of the solution is the combination of solution A and solution B
1.02 g/mL=mass/(25+25)
mass=50*1.02
mass=51g
Recall that Q=mCdT
mass=m, C=specific heat capacity
dT=change in temperature
qrxn = (51 g)(4.18 J/g⋅°C)(25.3 °C - 21.4 °C)
qrxn = 831 J
2.Heat=Heat capacity *change in temperature
qcal = (8.20 J/°C)((25.3 °C - 21.4 °C)
qcal = 31.98 J
qrxni + qcal = qrxn
qrxn = 831 J + 32.0 J
863 J------Heat of reaction
863 J =(51 g)(Heat Capacity)(25.3 °C - 21.4 °C)
4.34 J/g⋅°C
Fossils
Timelines
Molecular clocks
Molecular clocks use the relationship between the DNA of several groups of organisms to evaluate how long ago they diverged evolutionarily from one another. Therefore, option (4) is correct.
The molecular clock can be described as a figurative term for a technique that utilizes the mutation rate of biomolecules to determine the time when two or more life forms diverged. The biomolecular data used are usually nucleotide sequences for DNA, RNA, or amino acid sequences for proteins.
The benchmarks for calculating the mutation rate are often fossil or archaeological dates. The molecular clock is commonly used in molecular evolution to estimate times of speciation or radiation.
The molecular clock can only give one time period as it cannot assign concrete dates. For viral phylogenetics and ancient DNA studies, the areas of evolutionary biology, the intermediate samples can be utilized to more precisely calibrate the molecular clock.
Learn more about Molecular clocks, here:
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